Span developments had been around, and much admired, for some time when their architect Eric Lyons and his colleagues aired the ambitious project to develop a town in Kent. Buying two farms in 1961, the site would offer an entirely new version of a village. The Greater London Council (GLC) committed to take 450 houses, introducing mixed tenure and a more representative demographic than the professional middle class of Span developments. Two neighbourhoods were built (1966-69) and the shopping centre begun. Then, like a house of cards, the ambitious, idealistic project unravelled - the GLC pulled out, followed by Lyons, mortgages became scarce and funds ran out for the developers. Bovis stepped in and, in John Newman's words, 'the sparkle went out of the architecture'. At best, their elegant, low-key modernism, embraced by its well-treed landscape, suggested to John Grindrod in <i>Concretopia</i> a place rather 'more like the setting for a Lars von Trier film than hop-growing country'.  Search “수원오피{{뜨밤}}≪≪DDB69.닷컴≫≫소리ꈁ수원야구장ꆖ수원오피⑬수원휴게텔Պ수원풀싸롱㋬수원룸클럽ބ 수원오피” from 10 Wildly Innovative U.K. Homes of the 20th Century That Outshine the Rest

Search “수원오피{{뜨밤}}≪≪DDB69.닷컴≫≫소리ꈁ수원야구장ꆖ수원오피⑬수원휴게텔Պ수원풀싸롱㋬수원룸클럽ބ 수원오피”

Concretopia

Appears In

10 Wildly Innovative U.K. Homes of the 20th Century That Outshine the Rest